The Senator Who Stood Up to Joseph McCarthy When No One Else Would
Margaret Chase Smith was the first woman to serve both the House and the Senate and always defended her values, even when it meant opposing her party
The Maya Captured, Traded and Sacrificed Jaguars and Other Large Mammals
New archeological findings suggest the Maya city state Copan dealt in a robust jaguar trade
Stone Age Markings May Be the Oldest Drawing Ever Discovered
The crosshatch symbol was made with a red ochre utensil more than 70,000 years ago
The Lost Children of the Lidice Massacre
The Nazis arbitrarily slaughtered the Czech villagers, angering the world, even as Europe’s Jews faced similar fates in concentration camps
An Eyewitness Account of Pinochet’s Coup 45 Years Ago
Smithsonian ethnomusicologist Dan Sheehy poignantly recalls the brutal outcome of a nation divided
The First Academy Awards Had Its Own Version of the “Popular” Oscar
The ceremony itself was rooted in union-busting, laying the basis for the art vs. mass acclaim debate we see play out today
Fifty Years Ago, “Star Trek” Aired TV’s First Interracial Kiss
For actress Nichelle Nichols, the first black woman to have a continuing co-starring role on TV, it was the beginning of a lifelong career in activism
In 1915, technology merged with the “back to nature” movement, leading to the invention of the motorhome
When the U.S. Government Tried to Make It Rain by Exploding Dynamite in the Sky
Inspired by weather patterns during the Civil War, the rainmakers of the 1890s headed to west Texas to test their theory
The Mysterious Origins of the Smallpox Vaccine
Though the disease was declared eradicated in 1980, the era of smallpox is far from over
Two Sculptures of Ancient Women Give Voice to the Protection of Antiquities in War Zones
The Smithsonian’s elegant Haliphat of Palmyra and the blue-eyed Miriam from Yemen raise awareness of the illegal trade in and destruction of antiquities
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